The association of fasting glucose, insulin, and c-peptide, with 19-year incidence of coronary heart disease in older japanese-american men; the honolulu heart program

3Citations
Citations of this article
10Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The role of fasting glucose, insulin levels, and C-peptide in coronary heart disease (CHD) in non-diabetic individuals remains uncertain. We examined the association between fasting glucose, insulin and C-peptide with the long-term incidence of CHD in Japanese-American men. In 1980-1982, from a random sample of the Honolulu Heart Program men (n = 1378), aged 61-81 years, data on several CHD and metabolic risk factors were obtained to examine the relation of fasting glucose, insulin and C-peptide to 19-year CHD incidence. Age-adjusted incidence of CHD increased with increasing quintiles of glucose, insulin and C-peptide. Age-adjusted CHD rates in the glucose quintiles were 11.9, 11.6, 14.4, 18.1 and 24.1 per 1000 person-years (trend p < 0.001). In individual Cox models (lowest quintiles of glucose, insulin and C-peptide as reference) the relative risks (95% confidence interval) of CHD incidence for the glucose quintiles adjusting for age, smoking, hypertension, cholesterol, physical activity, and body mass index, were 0.9 (0.6-1.4), 1.2 (0.8-1.8), 1.4 (0.9-2.2), and 1.7 (1.1-2.6), respectively (trend p = 0.004). Insulin and C-peptide were not significantly associated with CHD on multivariate analysis. Fasting glucose remained the only significant predictor of increased CHD risk (p = 0.003) in a model combining all 3 metabolic variables. In this cohort, only fasting glucose independently predicts long-term incidence of CHD. Age-adjusted insulin and C-peptide levels were associated with CHD incidence, but after adjustment for other risk factors, do not independently predict CHD.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wahab, N., Chen, R., Curb, J. D., Willcox, B. J., & Rodriguez, B. L. (2018). The association of fasting glucose, insulin, and c-peptide, with 19-year incidence of coronary heart disease in older japanese-american men; the honolulu heart program. Geriatrics (Switzerland), 3(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics3020022

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free